God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
God's holiness and righteous glory have been desecrated, defamed, and blasphemed by our sin. It is with a holy God that we have to do in our guilt! And there can be no justification, no reconciliation, no cleansing of our conscience, unless the holiness of God is honored and the defamation of His righteousness is repaired. The urgency of our problem with guilt is not that we feel miserable, but that God's name has been blasphemed. We live in a day with such a horrendously inflated view of human potential and such a miserably tiny view of God's holiness that we can scarcely understand what the real problem of guilt is. The real problem is not, 'How can God be loving and yet condemn people with such little sins?' The real problem is, 'How can God be righteous if He acquits such miserable sinners as we?' There can be no lasting remedy for guilt which does not deal with God's righteous indignation against sin. That's why there had to be a sacrifice. And not just any sacrifice, but the sacrifice of the Son of God! No one else, and no other act, could repair the defamation done to the glory of God by our sins. But when Jesus died for the glory of the Father, satisfaction was made. The glory was restored. Righteousness was demonstrated. Henceforth it is clear that when God, by grace, freely justifies the ungodly (Romans 4:5), He is not indifferent to the demands of justice. It is all based on the grand transaction between the Father and the Son on the morning of Good Friday at Calvary. No other gospel can take away our guilt because no other gospel corresponds to the cosmic proportions of our sin in relation to God.
John Piper
Beet Salad I and Ii
0
(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Vegetables
Moroccan
Salads, Vegetables, Side dish, Breakfast &, Moroccan
1
Servings
INGREDIENTS
1
lb
Beets
1
tb
Sugar
1
Lemon, juice of
1
tb
Olive oil
1
pn
Cinnamon
1
tb
Chopped parsley
Salt, to taste
INSTRUCTIONS
Wash beets well, being careful not to break their skins. Cut off the tops,
leaving a stalk of about 1 1/2". Boil in a 3 quart saucepan until tender,
covered. Allow the water to cool, then slip off the skins, trim off the
tops, and cut into bite-sized pieces.
Mix the remaining ingredients and pour over the beets. Let marinate for 1
hour before serving.
Beet Salad II: Prepare as described above, but add 1 tsp. orange flower
water, 1/8 tsp. cumin, a pinch of paprika, and a little water to the sauce.
Yield: Approx. 2 cups.
From _Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco_ by Paula Wolfert. New
York: Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., 1987. Pp. 76-77. ISBN 0-06-091396-7.
Posted by Cathy Harned.
Recipe by: from Cheshire website Posted to EAT-L Digest by shade
<liveoak@POLARIS.NET> on Jul 5, 1997
A Message from our Provider:
“Perhaps it takes a purer faith to praise God for unrealized blessings than for those we once enjoyed or those we enjoy now. #A.W. Tozer”
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